Ascalapha odorata

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Ascalapha odorata

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Subclass: Pterygota
Order: Lepidoptera
Suborder: Ditrysia
Family: Noctuidae
Genus: Ascalapha
Species: A. odorata
Binomial name
Ascalapha odorata
L., 1758

The noctuid moth Ascalapha odorata bears the common name black witch moth. It is a harbinger of death in Mexican and Jamaican folklore. In Jamaica and the Caribean, the moth is known as the Duppy Bat. Other names for the moth include the Papillion-devil or the Mourning or Sorrow moth. In Jamaica, a Duppy Bat flying into the house is considered bad luck. [1]. It is a large bat-shaped, dark-colored nocturnal moth. Males can attain a wingspan of 16 cm. The dorsal surfaces of their wings are mottled brown with hints of iridescent purple and pink, crossed by a white bar. Their diagnostic marking is a small spot on each wing shaped like a number nine or a comma. This spot is often green with orange highlights. Females are somewhat smaller, reaching 12 cm in width, and lighter in color but with similar markings. The larva is a large caterpillar up to 7 cm in length with intricate patterns of black and greenish brown spots and stripes.

The black witch moth is found throughout Central America and Mexico, with its distribution extending from Brazil to the southern United States. It is the largest noctuid found in the continental United States. Adults feed on overripe rainforest fruit, especially bananas, and larvae consume the leaves of plants. Most of its host plants are legumes. It favors Acacia species, Kentucky coffee tree (Gymnocladus dioicus), and candlestick tree (Cassia alata). It attacks mesquite and edible fig, and can be an agricultural pest.

The moth undertakes a northward migration during the late spring and summer, moving up through Central America and entering the northern reaches of its range. During this season individual adults and masses of larvae can be found from Texas to Florida. It is also found in Hawaii, but it is not native to the islands.

[edit] See also

White Witch (moth)

[edit] External links

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